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What’s prepaid rent?

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Prepaid rent is a down payment on a property lease that is recorded as a current asset account to be debited in the future. It is important for generating financial statements and conforming to accounting principles. Refundable and non-refundable payments are treated differently for accounting purposes.

Prepaid rent is a down payment on a property lease. The amount of the prepayment is included in the books of the company leasing the property as a current asset account to be debited at some point in the future. As the business does its bookkeeping, the prepaid rental expense account allows the accountant to track the value of the asset until the time the amount is spent in the account.

All businesses must keep accounting records to comply with tax and other regulatory obligations. The business will periodically generate a set of financial statements to summarize its financial position. These statements conform to a set of generally accepted accounting principles that standardize financial reporting so that companies can be compared against each other in a common context. Standard accounting conventions specify how to carry outstanding rental deposits for a lease on the books until such time as the deposit is actually applied as payment for one month’s rent.

A rental agreement to lease a property is considered a tangible asset. When a company enters into such an agreement, it often has to pay not only the current month’s rent, but also a certain number of months in advance as a guarantee of compliance with the agreement. This security deposit can be refundable at the end of the lease if certain conditions are met or it can be treated as a non-refundable prepayment that pays the months at the end of the lease. Whether the security deposit is refundable or non-refundable determines how the amount is treated for accounting purposes

Non-refundable rental payments that cover rent for future months are recorded on the property owner’s books as deferred unearned income. The amount is posted to the books of the company that rents the property in the prepaid rental expense account. This account is capitalized, or decreased, when a prepaid rent amount is applied to pay one month’s rent.

This accounting convention is particularly important when generating a balance sheet. A balance sheet is a summary of a company’s financial position at a specific point in time. Rental deposits may be applied to months that are years in the future. Until the amount is actually applied toward payment for one month’s use of the leased property, it must be properly represented as a current asset when the company generates its financial statements. The prepaid rent account allows the company to demonstrate that it has a current asset that will benefit it at a future date.

Smart Asset.

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